Journalists from Southern Europe reflect on populism
Nationalisms in Spain – powerful, bloody till recently and one of the most complex issues for the central government.
A great deal of representatives of Italian people have adopted a redundancy lifestyle that reminds of football players or star system VIPs.
Societies slide towards those who give simplistic explanations and promise easy solutions. Thoughts of a member of political party „To Potami“.
A deep frustration has identified several enemies: the „casta“, the powerful untouchable politicians, the immigrants, Europe, the Euro.
The word populism has become a kind of container that serves almost everything you do not like.
The defeat of the „wait an see“ politics – can the new populism movement save the European Union?
How do we survive populism in europe? By ignoring it? By writing about it? By fearing it? By discussing it? How?
Conversation beteween two journalists on „How to survive pupulism“ – during a coffee break.
Am Samstag läuft der March for Europe durch Berlin. Zielgruppe: die „bisher schweigende Mehrheit der ProeuropäerInnen“, sagt Mitorganisatorin Katja Sinko
Einen Tag nach der Amtseinführung von Trump treffen sich Europas Rechtspopulisten, darunter Petry und Le Pen, in Koblenz. Sie stoßen auf massive Proteste.
Der neue Präsident des Europaparlaments stützt sich auf Konservative, Liberale und Rechtsnationale. Brüssel ist nun rabenschwarz.